It’s relatively easy for Americans to understand that parks,
sidewalks, the environment or the Internet are all part of the commons.
That’s because no one owns them.
But it’s more of a stretch when it comes to elements of the commons
that have traditionally been under private ownership. Access to health
care, for instance, rightly belongs to all of us the same as air, water,
sunshine or other things we depend upon for life. We are, after all,
morally bound to help anyone who needs medical attention. And our tax
money funds much of the research that results in new medicines
and procedures.
Yet these simple truths are clouded by the fact that in the United
States, even after the passage of President Obama’s health care reforms,
a large share of health services is operated on a for-profit basis—a
unique situation among wealthy nations, which means our health care is
more expensive and many people are denied access.
If health care were more widely recognized as a commons, the idea of a
public health care option—or even a single-payer system—would not seem
so controversial to Congress members. In fact, a look right across the
border at the Canadian health care programs shows how well a true health
care commons works.
How Canadians Created a Health Commons
The seeds of the current Canadian health system were sown in rural
Saskatchewan in the early twentieth century when small cities with no
doctors began to subsidize a physician to come and set up practice.
Several communities then joined together to open publicly
funded hospitals.
In the 1930s, a new Canadian political party, whose name reflected
its philosophy, the Cooperative Commonwealth Federation (CCF), came to
power in Saskatchewan. In 1946 the province enacted legislation that
guaranteed free hospital care. Premier Tommy Douglas had hoped to offer
universal health care, but the province lacked the financial resources.
In 1958, building on a decade of success of hospital care in
Saskatchewan, the Canadian federal government used the power of the
purse to coax other provinces to introduce public hospital insurance.
Ottawa promised to pay 50 percent of the cost of provincial programs
that satisfied the following rules, which were shaped by the idea of
health as a common¬wealth, or commons.
1.
Public Administration: The plan must be run by a public authority and be nonprofit.
2.
Comprehensiveness: All necessary medical services must be covered.
3.
Universality: Every resident of a given province or territory must be entitled to the same level and extent of coverage.
4.
Portability: When insured persons travel or move within or outside Canada, their coverage must be maintained.
5.
Accessibility: All insured persons must have access to hospital and physician services.
By 1961, all provinces had adopted a hospitalization insurance program.
Taking the Next Step Toward Universal Coverage
Since Saskatchewan had been paying 100 percent of the cost of its
program, the 50 percent federal match allowed it to extend public health
coverage to physicians’ visits. A promise to do so by Tommy Douglas,
who still led the CCF, became the principal issue in the 1960 provincial
elections. The CCF won, and on July 1, 1962, the new system went into
effect. That day 90 percent of the province’s doctors went on strike.
It was a defining moment in Canada’s health care history. Aided by
the American Medical Association, Saskatchewan’s doctors used some of
the same rhetoric that has proven so effective in U.S. health care
debates: socialized medicine is communistic and would limit a patient’s
choice of doctors.
But by 1962 Saskatchewan residents had been served by a commons-based
health care system for more than fifteen years. When the doctors called
a mass public demonstration against socialized medicine, expecting
forty thousand to attend, only 10 percent of that number showed up. The
strike ended two weeks later.
In 1964, came further evidence of how deeply rooted the idea of a
health commons had become in Saskatchewan. The CCF party lost the
elections. The incoming Liberal Party had opposed public insurance for
physicians’ services, but it did not try to overturn the 1962 law.
In 1966, Ottawa offered to fund provincial health plans for doctors
under the same conditions as it had funded provincial health plans for
hospitals. By 1972, every Canadian was covered by the new
Medicare insurance.
Thirty years later, a Commission on the Future of Health Care summed
up the pro¬cess thus: “The principles of the Canada Health Act began as
simple conditions attached to federal funding for medicare. Over time,
they became much more than that. . . .The principles have stood the test
of time and continue to reflect the values of Canadians.”
Lessons in Defending the Commons
The Canadian experience also shows that the price of defending a
commons, as with liberty in general, is eternal vigilance. Once created,
a commons will face continuing challenges from two major forces. One is
the ingenious ability of individuals and cor¬porations to find
loopholes that allow them to maximize their income at the expense of the
commons. The other is the tendency of governments during difficult
economic times (or when driven by market ideology) to starve the
commons, which undermines public support by reducing its effectiveness.
Canada’s health commons has had to defend itself against both forces.
The loophole it faced was that Canada’s Medicare legislation permitted
doctors and hospitals to charge patients extra for better service. The
law required universal access. But it did not specifically prohibit
doctors and hospitals from charging additional fees or allowing patients
to pay to jump ahead on the waiting lists. In 1984 Canada responded to
this threat by passing a new Health Act that effectively eliminated user
charges or surcharges on publicly insured services.
More recently, Canada’s health commons has had to deal with shrinking
federal support. By the early 2000s, the federal share of the
provincial health care budget was down from 50 percent to 20–30 percent.
Ever longer waiting lines resulted in ever broader public grumbling and
ever more aggressive lobbying by for-profit companies to be allowed to
deliver the same health services.
In 2005, the issue came to a head when the Supreme Court of Canada
voted 4–3 that Quebec’s prohibition against private health insurance for
medically necessary services violated the Quebec Charter of Human
Rights and Freedoms. Chief Justice Beverly McLachlin wrote, “Access to a
waiting list is not access to health care.”
Quebec responded in two ways. In 2007 it allowed private insurance
for the three surgeries that had the longest waiting times: knee and hip
replacements and cataract surgery. At the same time, it improved the
delivery structure of its health system to reduce waiting times. In
March 2009, Quebec’s Health Minister announced that nearly all patients
seeking knee and hip replacements in the public system were beginning
treatment within three months, down from nine months or more.
At the same time, CBC News reported, “More than two years after
Quebec legalized private medical coverage for select surgeries, the
insurance industry says it has not sold a single policy.”
In appreciation for their health care systems, Canadians in 2004
voted Tommy Douglas as “the Greatest Canadian” in a national poll
sponsored by the Canadian Broadcasting Company.
On the Commons is licensed under a Creative Commons license
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